Oregon Senators oppose vehicle emissions rollback: join Senate coalition; warn of health and economic risks
TOI World Desk | TOI Global Desk | Sep 26, 2025, 20:11 IST
Oregon Senators Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley have joined a group of Senate Democrats and independents opposing the Trump administration’s plan to weaken federal vehicle emissions standards. They argue the rollback would increase pollution, harm public health, raise fuel costs, and threaten jobs. The group urges the EPA to maintain existing clean air regulations.
TL;DR
Weakening emissions rules
In a letter to EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin, the senators warned that removing these rules will increase air pollution and damage the environment. They also said it will hurt public health, cost drivers more money, reduce jobs in the US, and make the country more dependent on foreign oil.
Joint effort to protect emissions standards
Wyden and Merkley’s work on environment
Why vehicle emissions standards matter
FAQs
They oppose the Trump administration’s plan to weaken federal vehicle emissions standards.
Q: Why do they say the rollback is harmful?
They say it will cause more pollution, hurt health, raise costs for drivers, damage jobs, and increase dependence on foreign oil.
Q: Who else supports this effort?
Other supporters include Senators Edward J. Markey, Sheldon Whitehouse, Jack Reed, Kirsten Gillibrand, Alex Padilla, Chris Van Hollen, Mazie K. Hirono, Bernie Sanders, and Cory Booker.